Adam Savage Visits the Stanley Kubrick Exhibition!
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- Опубликовано: 5 окт 2024
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After making its way around the world, the incredible exhibition of Stanley Kubrick's work has arrived in San Francisco. Adam Savage tours the exhibit to show you some of his favorite items. From rare camera equipment to pre-production artwork and film props, these objects connect us to one of cinema's greatest minds.
Learn more about the Stanley Kubrick exhibition here: www.thecjm.org/...
Shot and edited by Joey Fameli
Music by Jinglepunks
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Thanks for watching! - Наука
Learn more about the Stanley Kubrick exhibition here: www.stanleykubrick.de/en/ausstellungstour-exhibition-on-tour/
This video was posted over 2 years ago, why comment this now
Where is this exhibit now.... 2021?
Like Kubrick, Tommy Wiseau bought the equipment, a genius of modern cinema
Haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaahahahahahaha!
Your comment...wins!
Great story, Mark!
Anything for my princess.
get OUT OF MY HEAD
Oh Hi Stan.
such a shame kubrick never got to make the napoleon movie. would've been one of the best movies of all time, no doubt.
It's additionally unfortunate that the project was nixed in large part because of the release of another film about the Napoleon Wars, Waterloo, and it's failure at the box office. We all know Kubrick would have avoided that destiny for his film about Napoleon, but once studio execs have their minds made that is that.
There's no reason Kubrick couldn't have gone back to it in the 80s or 90s. I believe as he got older his growing need for control and staying close to home affected his desire to work on such a mammoth project, one that would have demanded a lot of traveling.
I read that Spielberg is producing a mini-series based on Kubrick's research and Napoleon collection.
+Linus Wärn
Interesting. Can you supply a link to the information? :)
Lukas Sprehn Google Spielberg Napoleon and there should come up something I promise. :-)
Only just discovered this piece today…..and how nice to see my A.I. sketches get a mention! Over the years I always managed to miss the exhibit at various venues because of work, until it surfaced in Copenhagen, where I was also invited to speak about my work with Kubrick.
As a known aficionado and collector of space helmets I'm surprised you didn't talk about the 2001 helmet opposite the apes head.
not to mention it's the damn poster frame for the video
Who knows, we may get a video on that, later.
poster frame? you mean thumbnail? :P
TheDude haha yes, I was spacing on the actual name for that in the moment
The very thing, they use to get u in, on thumbnail...doesn't fucking , get talked about !!!??
It's so cool Adam got to put his maze in the exhibit. He deserves it for sure, after all that work he put into it
Saw this Kubrick exhibition in Melbourne Australia a few years ago. Mesmerizing!
I would have had shivers up my spine the whole time I was at that exhibit! Love the way they displayed the books!
I saw Barry Lyndon a few weeks ago. It completely changed my view of what it was like after dark in a candle lit world.
It sucked.
I want to see that movie
"Gentlemen, you can't fight in here. This is the war room." 😁
Kubrick's assistant, Emilio D'Alessandro, lives in Cassino, Italy, and is a friend of my dad. He has released a book about his experiences, called 'Stanley Kubrick and Me'. Very interesting guy to share a pizza with :)
Grazie
There’s now a great documentary about their relationship too. I’m really glad Stanley had a friend like Emilio. He was very important to him.
Ask him why kubrick died after 6 days screening of eyes wide shut
Kubrick was an absolutely master. It's unbelievable how much so.
No, it's pretty believable. He was a great filmmaker. But, nothing "unbelievable" about it, Yet you'd think otherwise when reading what super-duper-extra-fans often write. Almost as if to imply he was an alien or something. Justin Bieber fans also have that level of extremist enthusiasm.
Bhatt Hole, you really need to cite some comparable directors or just stfu. Every damn comment you're attacking people for praising a true master.
@BELLING09 your comment is so generic
@BELLING09 another generic comment. C´mon! You can say something better.
@BELLING09 Bye, weirdo!
My dream is to be a film director and some of my greatest inspiration comes from kubrick. I'm inspired by his cinematography, storytelling, creativity, and more. One of my goals in life is to finish the films he started and make his dreams come true.
This is it, the RUclips algorithm is making Amonglas jokes.
mm yes, quite magnificent init?
GODDAMNIT.
WHY MUST YOU RUIN ONE OF MY FAVOURITE MOVIES?!
thumbnail is kinda sus
That was a quaint little model of the Shinning maze.
Meh, it was alright. :-D
Yeah mediocre at best :)
Amateurish work. I bet Adam could make one that would look a whole lot better than that one. ;)
In a day no doubt.
1 day build of it...naw i think only 12 hours...he did show off his "technique" of drying it via heat guns lol
4:53 - I have that Arne Jacobsen cutlery set! I fell in love with it when I saw it in 2001 and I use it all the time. The fork could've been wider, but the spoon goes nicely with a Ben & Jerry's Karamel Sutra Core.
Adam encountering HAL on the door into the exhibition...
"Open the door HAL."
"I'm afraid I can't do that, Adam."
I visited the Kubrick exhibition when it was in Melbourne (Australia) some years ago. '2001: A Space Odyssey' is my favourite movie, so to be looking at the 'star child' model while the final segment of the film was playing nearby was amazing. A great presentation Adam.
gort58 man, I bet that was interesting. His exhibit, does it travel from city to city?
@@rsears78 Its locked down... culture is finished... no more.
@@MsMesem I put 2001 thru my 4D Political Analysis Monitor because no one is overweight in the movie.
A small comment on the so called NASA lenses, it is true that Kubrick bought the two fast lenses from NASA but the manufacturer of the lenses is Carl Zeiss. Zeiss created three sets of f/0.7 lenses for NASA (35mm and 50mm). One set was used in the apollo project to photograph the dark side of the moon and I dont remember if that set is in NASA archives or on the moon. One set was used for training and the other set was a standby back up set. Later two sets were sold off and Kubrick bought the lenses.
If I remember correctly bought the Mitchell BNC after he bought the lenses, and the camera was modified to use the Zeiss and some of Kubrics old Cooke lenses. The rear element of the lens is only 4mm from the film plane, which is pretty darn impressive.
NASA commissioned Zeiss to make the lenses. That's all he meant by "NASA lenses." I don't think anyone was imagining NASA engineers actually hand crafting lenses themselves.
great addition to the lens story! As we are into those details, this is a welcome view into history of the item. Loved reading it!
He didn't buy them, itbwas given to them from NASA, so he could later film the moonlanding.
Huehue
SK filmed the moon landing.
The tour guide was fantastic ! I could have listened to his descriptions on every piece in this collection .
Would have been cool to see some more Full Metal Jacket stuff.
I did training for Apple back in Cupertino three years ago. My plane got delayed the last day so I had an extra day to explore San Francisco, and being the huge Kubrick fan that I am I had to visit this exhibit. It was the highlight of my trip and I think I spent the entire day there until the staff kicked us all out. I still think back to it every time I watch a Kubrick movie. Thanks for sharing Adam and the Tested team!
i cant do it anymore.
Oh man I looove Kubrick, Especially Doctor Strangelove. I'm so excited to see this.
i remember watching 2001 as a kid and the almost overwhelming sterility and austerity of space that the film made me feel.
Great vid. I was fascinated with the way Kubrick shot Barry Lyndon, too, and seeing the Mitchell camera and lens there was a real treat. Thanks, Adam!
Fascinated? When we were working our guts out to build a film industry outside of Hollywood.
Years later I'm glad my name isn't on any of these indoctrinating scams.
I swear to god this thumbnail is driving me insane.
Amogus
Amongus
Come on enough of the abstract bullshit.
I love seeing anyone this in love with anything (strange sentence). What a joy.
It is intoxicating.
I like how he glosses over the maze... like, you have seen this enough...
I'm sure he has.
It's iconic. Isn't the maze on every poster and DVD box and such for the film?
+davecc0000 I think the joke is that he made it
Yes that was what I was alluding to. He built the maze and it was a on day build video, he unboxed the maze for this exibition and it was a video... The joke was that he does not really need to acknowledge the maze...
Sean Farrell It wasn't a one day video, the video wasn't even labeled as one day. But it was fun to watch it get put together
Kubrick's attention to detail and his absolute dedication to his vision is just amazing. I'd love to see this exhibit.
Clickbait! You didn't show Dave's space helmet
did you read the title?
You have no idea what "Dave's space helmet" is, do you?
never saw the move.
6:50 Look at the right side of the screen... Hey, what's that!
BiggySn1p3r
then shut the fuck up
man the content on this channel has really stepped up! loving it!
Kubrick - the greatest film director of all time.
I thought it was Mel Gibson or Kevin Kostner, after all they have one of those crappy golden statues.
@@ziggy99777 golden statues don't mean shit
Aditya Chatterjee apparently you don’t have sarcasm in your native tongue
@@murrayr7703 you used crappy as an adjective. That's not sarcasm. I was just agreeing with you 😁
One of the greatest anyways. Not a great PERSON, but a great director.
saw this exhibition a few years back at the lacma. as an absolute lover of kubrick and 2001 specifically, i was honestly choking back tears through a majority of it. i recall seeing and touching the monolith as clearly as yesterday.
NASA hired Kubrick to fake the moon landing,
But he was such a perfectionist he shot on location.
Haha, troll on!
Of course Stanley would insist that they film the Moon landing on location at the Moon itself.
Kubrick bought three of the Zeiss f0.7 lenses in total and had his guy modify two of them to work with the Mitchell. He kept one for spare parts but never needed to use it. I recently interviewed a lens repair company in the San Fernando valley who has the unmodified parts lens. It's an incredible piece of engineering and the amount of glass in it is staggering. Very cool video!
That maze looked good. I am sure I have seen that somewhere before!
It was in the movie
Adam recreated it in one of his episodes.
please refer to the Oxford English Dictionary under the word sarcasm.
+Harvey Smith savage!
I went to this exhibit a few weeks before my 13th birthday. The lady at the desk warned my dad about the Parental Advisory section. Turns out it was the Clockwork Orange section, a film I have not seen to this day. After that exhibit, I am now 15 and have seen The Shining, Dr. Strangelove and 2001.
I want that Eyes Wide Shut mask to hang above my headboard
If it falls and lands on your pillow don't blame me, I warned you!
I was just in SF yesterday and noticed the posters for this exhibit. Alas, we were doig other things, so I didn't get to see it. I will have to go back!
I love this stuff! Those lenses were particularly fascinating
I wouldn't say they are not needed, there is still a big difference between using a fast lense and using a image stabilization on a slow lense, take a f4 lense and a f2.8 lense of the same range for example, having that extra steps lower will gives you much more control on the image.
It's not because they're not needed, it's mainly because at f0.7 there is practically no depth of field and it's nearly impossible to keep anything in focus. f0.95 lenses are out there and they tend to be quite soft and diffused at that stop as well.
I still like old school 35 mm metal cameras with glass lenses and celluloid film and use them from time to time.
Me alegra haberlo visitado cuando estaba en exhibición en Monterrey México!
I'm a simple man, I see a Tested video, I'm intrigued. I see Kubrick, I click immediately.
Jesus I'm so tired of that "I'm a simple man...I click when blah blah blah" crap...ahhhh shuddup
I'm a simple man, I see a complaint on the internet, I tell them to mind their own business.
Saw the show in Toronto was really wonderful, don't think I could fully appreciate all there was in the displays. Remember spending a lot of time looking at the camera and lenses, was in complete awe of all the equipment he had and used in the low light dinner scene and being amazed at how much detail and action he was able to capture. This film was sort of the bench mark for me when I tried shooting in low light conditions with a DSLRs. Best I could get was a 42.5mm f1.7, can't imagine having a cine lens at f stop of 0.7. Again the detail and research for his films were monumental in themselves.
Wow such an outstanding exhibit
I visited a very similar exhibition here in Rome something like 10 years ago, and it was phenomenal, to say the least
Barry Lyndon is by far my favorite movie
"The Colonel may say I'm ruined, and send me to the Devil. But, I would go to the Devil to serve the Regiment."
Easily top 5 coolest exhibits I have ever experienced in my entire life, thank u for coming to sf
For any British, European or from further afield visitors to the UK - this exhibition, showing off pretty much all the same artifacts, is now on at the London Design Museum until this September. Well worth a visit (I've been !).
Just been there today. You absolutely must visit the exhibition even if you know little about Kubrick. Spent a wonderful two hours in the exhibit. Seeing the moonwatcher suit and mask along with the 2001 helmet were the highlights for me.
GET OUT OF MY HEAD GET OUT OF MY HEAD
A true cinematic genius the detail in his characters background is astounding
Adam is so interesting. I think it's because he's so passionate about things?
yes -his enthusiasm is contagious. I found it interesting that he was qualified to work
as a model maker on a major Hollywood movie.
I killed a man
I saw that replica survival pack at the Museum of the Moving Image! I had no idea you had made it, Adam. Very cool!
also, that NASA jacket is fantastic
he didnt make it. he hass made replicas
1:38 The lenses were not made by NASA. They were made FOR NASA by the German optic company Carl Zeiss (Zeiss Planar 50mm F0.7)
I saw this in L.A. and my friends insisted on leaving way before I was ready. So much more I would love to have seen, but it was a wonderful experience to see the ape suit and astral baby. Even the recreations of things like the Clockwork Orange milk maids, and maze from The Shining were fun to see IRL. The deeper dive would have allowed me to check out those books and other real pieces of his process. I do like the poster display much better here in this SF version. So fun to see it again and have Adam explain it (even though I already knew). Kubrick's brilliance is overwhelming. Thanks Adam n crew.
Except for a single very powerful radio emission aimed at Jupiter the four-million year old black monolith has remained completely inert. Its origin, purpose, and present location still... a total mystery.
Memorable quote from the movie. In the Clarke book the transmission was sent to Saturn.
@@warrenpierce5542 I saw a segment saying the rings of Saturn would have been to difficult to portray with the techniques of the time so the switch to Jupiter.
Arthur C. Clark. The greatest sci-fi writer in all of history.
I went to that exhibition at LACMA and it was great, especially the fetus from 2001. the guy who played the head ape spoke at my local library in Burbank and I've met Kubrick's daughter who played the little girl who talks to her daddy on the picture phone several times at various drawing workshops in LA.
Adam has a great way of delivering complex info for the layman. I appreciate the easter egg comment about the maze. :)
I saw the Exhibit at the LACMA Museum in Los Angeles, then I went to see, in a different Museum- the perfect replica of the room in 2001 a Space Odyssey. No monolith. Out of this world.
A M O G U S
I found a photo online showing the space station miniature from 2001 sitting dumped in a field in England behind a fence. On close examination it was definitely the actual item immortalised on film, down to the unbuilt framework sections you see in the movie.
I never see the docking sequence quite the same way now.
The man never made a bad movie
Just seen this exhibition in London! Great to learn about and see all the items from all those great movies
Kubricgasm
I really wish I could attend that exhibit. Keep it there for a few years, Adam. Don't let 'em leave
So interesting Video ! Nice to hear germans talking english ^^ Greetings from Germany
The whole exhibition is in fact a project by the German Film Museum in Frankfurt.
It is even better when you hear that German accent when talking about Dr. Strangelove:)
Cool! didnt know it!
Hahaa yeah ^^
*speaking.
adam..thank you for this video. you're very fortunate to have been part of kubricks team on a.i. though not appreciated by theatre goers, Barry lyndon is still one of my favorite films. napoleon by kubrick would have been fascinating
amogus helmet 😳
Thank you for sharing this with us Adam. I'm a budding filmmaker and this is Gold..
there is no buffet table in the war room. The buffet table was the idea that shifted it from a drama to a comedy
but there was still physically a buffet table in the war room
"There's no fighting in the war room!" Fucking brilliant
Chistian Moes do you mean the one in the film, because there is, or the one IRL, in which case there isn't even a real war room
Thank you for making us see this,.......Greetings from Quebec !
LOL maze joke! nice adam he made one or that one
Yep, that's the one he made.
He made that one, the one that used to be in the exhibition was shitty so Adam made an acurate one which was welcomed to be in the exhibition. And now it is!
@Openbitch WTF do you know?
Learned more about Stanley from Adam than all the self absorbed writing there is out there about him. Thank you sir!
How does one man get all the credit for this? I mean the production designers had nothing to contribute.
thank you for this!! I'll never forgive myself for not making the time to visit the exhibit when it was at the MoCA in LA.
Where can I get the awesome Nasa jacket of yours?
NASA gift shop
I have no idea where he got it, but he must have like ten of them
There is a tested video about it, someone makes them with your measurements.
Seek out alworden dot com for the original source.
It's strange that a Mythbuster is supporting the biggest hoax of all time by wearing a NASA badge.
I got the chance to see this exhibition at Museo MARCO (Monterrey, Mexico) back in 2015, and it was mesmerising, breathtaking, incredible... it was, Kubrick!
Thumbnail lookin sus
as a focus puller, I love the idea that the actors were actually trying to help out with focus for once. lol
wow that film AI made me cry it was an amazing film but sad to watch so well made.
Imposter helmet found 😳
tested at its finest! now that was a good episode, to see adam showing off and reminiscing - fun fun fun & the camera gear - so cool
Thumbnail sus😳
sus
Barry Lyndon was not shot utilizing natural light only- just portions of the film. What makes all of this astonishing the amount of care and effort Kubrick exerted just for the few scenes that called for the modified Mitchell BNC and the NASA glass. Kubrick was notorious for his quilted approach to the visual aspects of his movies- from mixing lenses, to shooting on various camera bodies that could be operated differently, to utilizing his own photographic equipment.
the thumbnail is kinda sus
6:56 the way the room echoes when Adam says "chewbacca" is really cool..
That's smaller than what I thought an f/0.7 lens would look like.
Usually very fast also means some serious amounts of glass.
It's way different than the photos I saw in American Cinematographer shortly after the Barry Lyndon came out. The barrels of the lenses were brass, unfinished, or maybe Kubrick had them painted later.
I thought they were about the same. Of course, it's not the lens that has the film plane, it's the distance from the lens to the film plane that one is interested in...but if you are saying that in the same distance, the cine lens will project a smaller image...then that's an interesting subject...
You know, I do not want to make films like Kubrick but as an artist I would love to create something people enjoy. It is amazing that in any field of art, there is no difference in methodology, it is simply the application of different tools. In his case, his canvas was his film. Watching this is inspiring to say the least and will keep me motivated to get my art degree and keep creating new things.
I wish he would have cared more about that maze. Someone probably spent lot of time building it and he's like it's nothing special.
it's because he made it
Wow, Alba. Wow. If we could go as far over your head as that joke did we could finally get to mars.
Alba Alba At least you feel remorse for not having a sense of humour. I accept your apology.
Sarcasm doesn't work on RUclips comments.
+Alba Alba I dont think anyone asked about your sleep schedule
Absolutely love Savage’s reverence in this one. It’s tangible.
Sadly underrated movie, AI.
I agree. Spielberg really did it justice, it is beautiful and haunting.
I want to go to Rouge City. It looks like a great party place. They have sex robots like Gigilo Jane.
The only thing the movie got super-wrong is Dr. Know. He is basically Google Search. But i still love
Robin Williams voicing Dr. Know. And the animation of Einstein was great.
Heard about NASA lens did specific job for Kubrick. Your explanation is really comprehensive. Thanks Adam. Thanks Tested.
Amogus thumbnail
I do hope all that lovingly gathered research into the Napoleonic era gets brought to life again by many a gifted and well-supported creator, both in films and games
the maze :)
100% geek out...I understood the camera lens stuff....very nerdy, love it
Came here for the amogus
Saw this when it was in Toronto, fantastic exhibit, I didn't even know they were going to have the floor with his lenses and unfinished films. Great insight into an absolute maniac haha.
among us thumbnail